4.5 Article

Optimization and Design of an Absorbance Spectrometer Controlled Using a Raspberry Pi To Improve Analytical Skills

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION
Volume 93, Issue 7, Pages 1232-1240

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.5b01006

Keywords

First-Year Undergraduate/General; Physical Chemistry; Analytical Chemistry; Problem Solving/Decision Making; Instrumental Methods; Interdisciplinary/Multidisciplinary; Quantitative Analysis; Laboratory Computing/Interfacing Kinetics; UV-Vis Spectroscopy

Funding

  1. Chemistry teaching department
  2. Teaching lab of chemistry department
  3. Marie Curie Fellowship
  4. European Research Council

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It is not uncommon for students to view laboratory instruments as black boxes. Unfortunately, this can often result in poor experimental results and interpretation. To tackle this issue, a laboratory course was designed to enable students not only to critically think about operating principles of the instrument but also to improve interpretation skills. Students were required to build their own visible spectrometer using interlocking building bricks with simple optical elements and a Raspberry Pi computer. Experiments were then conducted to explore the instrumental capabilities while, at the same time, using Python programming to plot data, perform linear least-squares fitting, and calculate errors. Instrument response and spectral measurements were followed by kinetic studies, enabling the students to tackle a real problem by extracting rate constants. The main learning outcomes were that the students would gain a better understanding of instrumental components and at the same time learn valuable analytical techniques such as calibration, determination of the limits of linearity, and dynamic range. These outcomes were achieved by applying a problem based learning approach.

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